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[The Breakthrough Series on Cesarean Section]

Overview
Specialty General Medicine
Date 2006 Jan 18
PMID 16415941
Citations 2
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Abstract

Background: The "breakthrough series" on caesarean section was organised in Norway in 1998/99 in response to professional concerns about rising caesarean section rates and the public debate about the topic. The aim was to gain more information and to reduce the inter-hospital variation of caesarean section rates.

Material And Methods: Detailed information about 3000 caesarean sections (70% of all caesarean sections in Norway during the study period of 7 months) was collected. Twenty-four departments participated and were involved in a quality-improvement process.

Results: In 1998 the caesarean section rate among the participating departments was 13.5% (inter-hospital variation 8.6% to 20.4%). In 2002 the rate was 15.7% (inter-hospital variation 11.0%-24.5%). The most frequent indications were fetal stress, prolonged labour, previous caesarean section, breech presentation and maternal request. Of the women with a previous caesarean section, 45.5% had a new caesarean section in their next pregnancy. Complications occurred in 21% of all procedures; risk factors were general anaesthesia, low gestational age, fetal macrosomia and degree of cervical dilation.

Interpretation: The project highlighted quality improvement work and interdisciplinary working processes and led to more knowledge about caesarean section. The inter-hospital variation was unchanged four years after the project.

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